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View Full Version : I know it is crime fiction, could they not be accurate for once


mapuc
09-15-15, 01:37 PM
I watch either CSI-Miami or CSI-New-York.

I know it's fiction, but could they not try to somehow accurate

In yesterdays episode the first people to enter a ongoing crime scene was the people from CSI-No they don't

The first to enter such scene are the police or the SWAT-team and when the crime scene is(forgot the word) then the paramedics enter the scene, to take care of wounded people and to see who's dead, then and first then the people from CSI are allowed to enter the crime area.

Have seen some of these CSI and, OK I don't know how CSI people work in the states, but here, we have expert i ballistics, fire a.s.o

I see the same guy investigate a bullet, then a crime scene where there has been a fire, then the teeth of a dead person.

I love CSI-but could their not for once be accurate

Or is the CSI people educated to do several things ?

Markus

Oberon
09-15-15, 01:45 PM
I think a lot of crime shows have to take some licence when dealing with realism, because giving too much information on how police work to the public might not be a fantastic idea. It might be better to let people think the police can do some of the stuff they can in CSI, so that they don't commit a crime thinking that they'll get caught when in fact they might not.

NeonSamurai
09-15-15, 01:45 PM
That series of shows was always a mix of a tiny bit of real investigative methods, and a whole load of umm well you know. For me it was the constant use of magic lights and lasers and other utter nonsense that made me turn the show off. That and David Caruso and his utterly moronic puns and one liners :/\\!!

But I guess the show would do poorly in the ratings if it didn't have its nonsense action, utter lack of police procedure (which lets face it in reality would be tedious as heck to watch real CSI secure and investigate a crime scene). I didn't mind the first series though, at least the characters were a bit interesting.

I think a lot of crime shows have to take some licence when dealing with realism, because giving too much information on how police work to the public might not be a fantastic idea. It might be better to let people think the police can do some of the stuff they can in CSI, so that they don't commit a crime thinking that they'll get caught when in fact they might not.

I think its more so they don't bore the viewers to the point of changing channels. It is not like the methodology or techniques used are at all secret, and most smart career criminals are already aware of most of it. Also if you look at the crime murderporn shows, they get it mostly right, but then its a case of actual crimes and investigations vs dramatized fiction.

mapuc
09-15-15, 01:54 PM
I think a lot of crime shows have to take some licence when dealing with realism, because giving too much information on how police work to the public might not be a fantastic idea. It might be better to let people think the police can do some of the stuff they can in CSI, so that they don't commit a crime thinking that they'll get caught when in fact they might not.

True- But as mention in the start of my post-Let the police/SWAT go in first then paramedics then SCI

And let a few more actors/actress be on the series let them be "expert" on a given thing e.g ballistics or teeth.

People don't have to see how the police enter a ongoing crime-scene

Markus

Platapus
09-15-15, 04:15 PM
In a TV program it is important to have a limited number of "major" roles. In a real crime investigation there may be dozens of people working the case and then not work together for many cases.

So they combine stuff and make the stars the .. uh.. well.. stars of the investigation.

I would imagine that actual CSI operations are rather boring with a cubic buttload of paperwork but that does not make for exciting TV.

I think that any one actually working in an industry portrayed on TV/movies is shaking their heads ruefully. I know in my job if I could do what they do on TV/movies, my job would be a snap.

AndyJWest
09-15-15, 04:53 PM
See the Wikipedia article on the CSI effect. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSI_effect The dubious science, along with much else puts unrealistic expectations in the minds of jurors who have to deal with real court cases involving real evidence.

Red October1984
09-15-15, 05:39 PM
Hard to find good crime fiction IMHO.

Never was into CSI, NCIS, Law and Order, etc.

August
09-15-15, 08:29 PM
My wife loves those kind of shows but I can't stand them. Too dark and depressing.

Oberon
09-15-15, 09:28 PM
See the Wikipedia article on the CSI effect. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSI_effect The dubious science, along with much else puts unrealistic expectations in the minds of jurors who have to deal with real court cases involving real evidence.

True that. In the case I was on, the police ran into a hitch when the defendants solicitor produced betting slips which were used to explain the money he was found with about a month or so after the defendant was arrested. The police went to the betting shops but found that the tapes were only kept on a weekly basis and were overwritten after that. :dead: They'd have never had that problem in CSI.

fireftr18
09-15-15, 09:38 PM
There are many artistic licenses needed to make a show doable. The characters are experts in everything to keep the cast small. They abbreviate proper procedure so that the show will flow and work in the time frame. You see the cast as first persons on the scene because it's about them, not initial patrol responders, paramedics, fire, etc. It's just assumed they were there and did their thing, then CSI shows up. Then visual items. An example is blood. In the shows, the blood is always bright red. In real life, it soaks into materials and the redness gets lost, pools of blood actually turn brown and get crusty. I figure this is done so that the viewer can identify the substance as blood.
The viewer needs to simply imagine that administrative and procedural tasks are done.
Your question about real life CSI. Every police officer is educated in basic crime scene investigation, every fire fighter is trained in basic fire scene investigation. Both are trained in scene and evidence preservation. Beyond that, it depends on the jurisdiction. Larger cities will have there own specialists, while smaller jurisdictions will rely on state specialists. As the complexity of the incident increases, the level of specialization of the investigators increase.

Sailor Steve
09-15-15, 11:10 PM
The above complaints are true of every single show about people doing their jobs. I was acquainted with a pathologist who absolutely hated all doctor shows. She knew nothing about police procedures, so she was fine with those shows.

I was a big fan of JAG, though it was mentioned once that the big case they solved every week was about as much as a real Judge Advocate saw in a decade. Most jobs are boring if you just watch the people going about their business.

The last cop show I enjoyed was Hill Street Blues, mainly because they had a big ensemble cast and so much going on that it wasn't uncommon to see a detective spend three episodes on a stakeout only to be told that the guy they were looking for had been caught in another precinct.

As for depressing? I once tuned into an episode of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit just to see what the fuss was all about. It started with the murder of an eight-year-old girl. I switched the channel and never gave it another look.

Oberon
09-15-15, 11:29 PM
Ah yes, Sports Utility Vehicle, yeah, probably not the best entry point into the series, does tend to deal with the rather...nastier side of crime.

Still, Steve has a good point, I mean how many of us have torn apart an episode of any series which has a submarine or naval activity in it? :03:

Herr-Berbunch
09-16-15, 05:18 AM
I'm in awe of the way ever American on TV instantly, without looking, despite time of day, despite the weather, knows their direction of travel, and how it's always perfectly aligned to the major four points of the compass. :arrgh!:

Betonov
09-16-15, 06:56 AM
That's why I prefer british crime series.
A lot of talking but they are down to earth.

CSI is unfortunately all flash, little substance but I like NCSI, the characters are a better written.

Platapus
09-16-15, 08:26 AM
See the Wikipedia article on the CSI effect. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSI_effect The dubious science, along with much else puts unrealistic expectations in the minds of jurors who have to deal with real court cases involving real evidence.

Not just juries. Ask anyone working in the Intelligence business. Even members of congress are getting the "CSI effect" :nope:

mapuc
09-16-15, 11:20 AM
As I wrote I love the SCI-series, except when other stuff comes on TV

Some days ago ZDFINFO had a documentary about the days before the German invasion of Poland-Das Nervenkrieg-In that case I know what I chose.

Markus

fireftr18
09-16-15, 08:35 PM
I have seen the show "Rescue Me." Some of the firefighting scenes were so realistic, I couldn't help but bust out laughing. That's because some of the same things happened to me or I did.